Promisifying an API - javascript

If I want to promisify all code paths in myFunction, do I need to create a deferred inside myFunction?
function myFunction(options) {
if(!options) {
throw 'foo'; // But I want the API for myFunction to be promise-based...
}
return promiseBasedApi.doSomethingAndReturnPromise();
}

do I need to create a deferred inside myFunction?
(That's jQuery terminology, the general case would be "Do I need to create a promise in my function?")
Only if your function doesn't already have a promise it can return; frequently, it does, if it's waiting on any asynchronous operation (ajax, some other promise-based API, etc.) to complete.
if(!options) {
throw 'foo'; // But I want the API for myFunction to be promise-based...
}
If you're asking if you need to create an reject a promise for the error that options is not provided, no, I wouldn't expect that of an API. There are two aspects to an asynchronous operation's API:
Initiation
Completion
In the above, failing to supply options is an error during the initiation of the request. I would expect an inline exception, not an asynchronous error callback.
Errors processing the request (HTTP failures, etc.) would be errors I'd expect via the promise's rejection mechanism.

No, you do not need a deferred or the Promise constructor in your function. You do need those only for non-promise-based APIs. Even then, you should not use it globally, but a separate promise capability for each asynchronous code path.
In your case, you should just return a rejected promise instead of throwing:
function myFunction(options) {
if (!options) {
return Promise.reject(new FooError()); // as promised!
}
return promiseBasedApi.doSomethingAndReturnPromise();
}
An alternative, if you are using Bluebird, would be to wrap your throwing-or-(promise)-returning function in Promise.method. See also Should an async API ever throw synchronously? and Should a Promise.reject message be wrapped in Error? for related discussions.

Related

Why use a promise to wrap axios API calls? [duplicate]

I was writing code that does something that looks like:
function getStuffDone(param) { | function getStuffDone(param) {
var d = Q.defer(); /* or $q.defer */ | return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
// or = new $.Deferred() etc. | // using a promise constructor
myPromiseFn(param+1) | myPromiseFn(param+1)
.then(function(val) { /* or .done */ | .then(function(val) {
d.resolve(val); | resolve(val);
}).catch(function(err) { /* .fail */ | }).catch(function(err) {
d.reject(err); | reject(err);
}); | });
return d.promise; /* or promise() */ | });
} | }
Someone told me this is called the "deferred antipattern" or the "Promise constructor antipattern" respectively, what's bad about this code and why is this called an antipattern?
The deferred antipattern (now explicit-construction anti-pattern) coined by Esailija is a common anti-pattern people who are new to promises make, I've made it myself when I first used promises. The problem with the above code is that is fails to utilize the fact that promises chain.
Promises can chain with .then and you can return promises directly. Your code in getStuffDone can be rewritten as:
function getStuffDone(param){
return myPromiseFn(param+1); // much nicer, right?
}
Promises are all about making asynchronous code more readable and behave like synchronous code without hiding that fact. Promises represent an abstraction over a value of one time operation, they abstract the notion of a statement or expression in a programming language.
You should only use deferred objects when you are converting an API to promises and can't do it automatically, or when you're writing aggregation functions that are easier expressed this way.
Quoting Esailija:
This is the most common anti-pattern. It is easy to fall into this when you don't really understand promises and think of them as glorified event emitters or callback utility. Let's recap: promises are about making asynchronous code retain most of the lost properties of synchronous code such as flat indentation and one exception channel.
What's wrong with it?
But the pattern works!
Lucky you. Unfortunately, it probably doesn't, as you likely forgot some edge case. In more than half of the occurrences I've seen, the author has forgotten to take care of the error handler:
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
resolve(result.property.example);
});
})
If the other promise is rejected, this will happen unnoticed instead of being propagated to the new promise (where it would get handled) - and the new promise stays forever pending, which can induce leaks.
The same thing happens in the case that your callback code causes an error - e.g. when result doesn't have a property and an exception is thrown. That would go unhandled and leave the new promise unresolved.
In contrast, using .then() does automatically take care of both these scenarios, and rejects the new promise when an error happens:
return getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
return result.property.example;
})
The deferred antipattern is not only cumbersome, but also error-prone. Using .then() for chaining is much safer.
But I've handled everything!
Really? Good. However, this will be pretty detailed and copious, especially if you use a promise library that supports other features like cancellation or message passing. Or maybe it will in the future, or you want to swap your library against a better one? You won't want to rewrite your code for that.
The libraries' methods (then) do not only natively support all the features, they also might have certain optimisations in place. Using them will likely make your code faster, or at least allow to be optimised by future revisions of the library.
How do I avoid it?
So whenever you find yourself manually creating a Promise or Deferred and already existing promises are involved, check the library API first. The Deferred antipattern is often applied by people who see promises [only] as an observer pattern - but promises are more than callbacks: they are supposed to be composable. Every decent library has lots of easy-to-use functions for the composition of promises in every thinkable manner, taking care of all the low-level stuff you don't want to deal with.
If you have found a need to compose some promises in a new way that is not supported by an existing helper function, writing your own function with unavoidable Deferreds should be your last option. Consider switching to a more featureful library, and/or file a bug against your current library. Its maintainer should be able to derive the composition from existing functions, implement a new helper function for you and/or help to identify the edge cases that need to be handled.
Now 7 years later there is a simpler answer to this question:
How do I avoid the explicit constructor antipattern?
Use async functions, then await every Promise!
Instead of manually constructing nested Promise chains such as this one:
function promised() {
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
getAnotherPromise(result).then(function(result2) {
resolve(result2);
});
});
});
}
just turn your function async and use the await keyword to stop execution of the function until the Promise resolves:
async function promised() {
const result = await getOtherPromise();
const result2 = await getAnotherPromise(result);
return result2;
}
This has various benefits:
Calling the async function always returns a Promise, which resolves with the returned value and rejects if an error get's thrown inside the async function
If an awaited Promise rejects, the error get's thrown inside the async function, so you can just try { ... } catch(error) { ... } it like the synchronous errors.
You can await inside loops and if branches, making most of the Promise chain logic trivial
Although async functions behave mostly like chains of Promises, they are way easier to read (and easier to reason about)
How can I await a callback?
If the callback only calls back once, and the API you are calling does not provide a Promise already (most of them do!) this is the only reason to use a Promise constructor:
// Create a wrapper around the "old" function taking a callback, passing the 'resolve' function as callback
const delay = time => new Promise((resolve, reject) =>
setTimeout(resolve, time)
);
await delay(1000);
If await stops execution, does calling an async function return the result directly?
No. If you call an async function, a Promise gets always returned. You can then await that Promise too inside an async function. You cannot wait for the result inside of a synchronous function (you would have to call .then and attach a callback).
Conceptually, synchronous functions always run to completion in one job, while async functions run synchronously till they reach an await, then they continue in another job.

Nested Promise and reject handling [duplicate]

I was writing code that does something that looks like:
function getStuffDone(param) { | function getStuffDone(param) {
var d = Q.defer(); /* or $q.defer */ | return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
// or = new $.Deferred() etc. | // using a promise constructor
myPromiseFn(param+1) | myPromiseFn(param+1)
.then(function(val) { /* or .done */ | .then(function(val) {
d.resolve(val); | resolve(val);
}).catch(function(err) { /* .fail */ | }).catch(function(err) {
d.reject(err); | reject(err);
}); | });
return d.promise; /* or promise() */ | });
} | }
Someone told me this is called the "deferred antipattern" or the "Promise constructor antipattern" respectively, what's bad about this code and why is this called an antipattern?
The deferred antipattern (now explicit-construction anti-pattern) coined by Esailija is a common anti-pattern people who are new to promises make, I've made it myself when I first used promises. The problem with the above code is that is fails to utilize the fact that promises chain.
Promises can chain with .then and you can return promises directly. Your code in getStuffDone can be rewritten as:
function getStuffDone(param){
return myPromiseFn(param+1); // much nicer, right?
}
Promises are all about making asynchronous code more readable and behave like synchronous code without hiding that fact. Promises represent an abstraction over a value of one time operation, they abstract the notion of a statement or expression in a programming language.
You should only use deferred objects when you are converting an API to promises and can't do it automatically, or when you're writing aggregation functions that are easier expressed this way.
Quoting Esailija:
This is the most common anti-pattern. It is easy to fall into this when you don't really understand promises and think of them as glorified event emitters or callback utility. Let's recap: promises are about making asynchronous code retain most of the lost properties of synchronous code such as flat indentation and one exception channel.
What's wrong with it?
But the pattern works!
Lucky you. Unfortunately, it probably doesn't, as you likely forgot some edge case. In more than half of the occurrences I've seen, the author has forgotten to take care of the error handler:
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
resolve(result.property.example);
});
})
If the other promise is rejected, this will happen unnoticed instead of being propagated to the new promise (where it would get handled) - and the new promise stays forever pending, which can induce leaks.
The same thing happens in the case that your callback code causes an error - e.g. when result doesn't have a property and an exception is thrown. That would go unhandled and leave the new promise unresolved.
In contrast, using .then() does automatically take care of both these scenarios, and rejects the new promise when an error happens:
return getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
return result.property.example;
})
The deferred antipattern is not only cumbersome, but also error-prone. Using .then() for chaining is much safer.
But I've handled everything!
Really? Good. However, this will be pretty detailed and copious, especially if you use a promise library that supports other features like cancellation or message passing. Or maybe it will in the future, or you want to swap your library against a better one? You won't want to rewrite your code for that.
The libraries' methods (then) do not only natively support all the features, they also might have certain optimisations in place. Using them will likely make your code faster, or at least allow to be optimised by future revisions of the library.
How do I avoid it?
So whenever you find yourself manually creating a Promise or Deferred and already existing promises are involved, check the library API first. The Deferred antipattern is often applied by people who see promises [only] as an observer pattern - but promises are more than callbacks: they are supposed to be composable. Every decent library has lots of easy-to-use functions for the composition of promises in every thinkable manner, taking care of all the low-level stuff you don't want to deal with.
If you have found a need to compose some promises in a new way that is not supported by an existing helper function, writing your own function with unavoidable Deferreds should be your last option. Consider switching to a more featureful library, and/or file a bug against your current library. Its maintainer should be able to derive the composition from existing functions, implement a new helper function for you and/or help to identify the edge cases that need to be handled.
Now 7 years later there is a simpler answer to this question:
How do I avoid the explicit constructor antipattern?
Use async functions, then await every Promise!
Instead of manually constructing nested Promise chains such as this one:
function promised() {
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
getAnotherPromise(result).then(function(result2) {
resolve(result2);
});
});
});
}
just turn your function async and use the await keyword to stop execution of the function until the Promise resolves:
async function promised() {
const result = await getOtherPromise();
const result2 = await getAnotherPromise(result);
return result2;
}
This has various benefits:
Calling the async function always returns a Promise, which resolves with the returned value and rejects if an error get's thrown inside the async function
If an awaited Promise rejects, the error get's thrown inside the async function, so you can just try { ... } catch(error) { ... } it like the synchronous errors.
You can await inside loops and if branches, making most of the Promise chain logic trivial
Although async functions behave mostly like chains of Promises, they are way easier to read (and easier to reason about)
How can I await a callback?
If the callback only calls back once, and the API you are calling does not provide a Promise already (most of them do!) this is the only reason to use a Promise constructor:
// Create a wrapper around the "old" function taking a callback, passing the 'resolve' function as callback
const delay = time => new Promise((resolve, reject) =>
setTimeout(resolve, time)
);
await delay(1000);
If await stops execution, does calling an async function return the result directly?
No. If you call an async function, a Promise gets always returned. You can then await that Promise too inside an async function. You cannot wait for the result inside of a synchronous function (you would have to call .then and attach a callback).
Conceptually, synchronous functions always run to completion in one job, while async functions run synchronously till they reach an await, then they continue in another job.

Wrapping an axios post call in a promise [duplicate]

I was writing code that does something that looks like:
function getStuffDone(param) { | function getStuffDone(param) {
var d = Q.defer(); /* or $q.defer */ | return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
// or = new $.Deferred() etc. | // using a promise constructor
myPromiseFn(param+1) | myPromiseFn(param+1)
.then(function(val) { /* or .done */ | .then(function(val) {
d.resolve(val); | resolve(val);
}).catch(function(err) { /* .fail */ | }).catch(function(err) {
d.reject(err); | reject(err);
}); | });
return d.promise; /* or promise() */ | });
} | }
Someone told me this is called the "deferred antipattern" or the "Promise constructor antipattern" respectively, what's bad about this code and why is this called an antipattern?
The deferred antipattern (now explicit-construction anti-pattern) coined by Esailija is a common anti-pattern people who are new to promises make, I've made it myself when I first used promises. The problem with the above code is that is fails to utilize the fact that promises chain.
Promises can chain with .then and you can return promises directly. Your code in getStuffDone can be rewritten as:
function getStuffDone(param){
return myPromiseFn(param+1); // much nicer, right?
}
Promises are all about making asynchronous code more readable and behave like synchronous code without hiding that fact. Promises represent an abstraction over a value of one time operation, they abstract the notion of a statement or expression in a programming language.
You should only use deferred objects when you are converting an API to promises and can't do it automatically, or when you're writing aggregation functions that are easier expressed this way.
Quoting Esailija:
This is the most common anti-pattern. It is easy to fall into this when you don't really understand promises and think of them as glorified event emitters or callback utility. Let's recap: promises are about making asynchronous code retain most of the lost properties of synchronous code such as flat indentation and one exception channel.
What's wrong with it?
But the pattern works!
Lucky you. Unfortunately, it probably doesn't, as you likely forgot some edge case. In more than half of the occurrences I've seen, the author has forgotten to take care of the error handler:
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
resolve(result.property.example);
});
})
If the other promise is rejected, this will happen unnoticed instead of being propagated to the new promise (where it would get handled) - and the new promise stays forever pending, which can induce leaks.
The same thing happens in the case that your callback code causes an error - e.g. when result doesn't have a property and an exception is thrown. That would go unhandled and leave the new promise unresolved.
In contrast, using .then() does automatically take care of both these scenarios, and rejects the new promise when an error happens:
return getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
return result.property.example;
})
The deferred antipattern is not only cumbersome, but also error-prone. Using .then() for chaining is much safer.
But I've handled everything!
Really? Good. However, this will be pretty detailed and copious, especially if you use a promise library that supports other features like cancellation or message passing. Or maybe it will in the future, or you want to swap your library against a better one? You won't want to rewrite your code for that.
The libraries' methods (then) do not only natively support all the features, they also might have certain optimisations in place. Using them will likely make your code faster, or at least allow to be optimised by future revisions of the library.
How do I avoid it?
So whenever you find yourself manually creating a Promise or Deferred and already existing promises are involved, check the library API first. The Deferred antipattern is often applied by people who see promises [only] as an observer pattern - but promises are more than callbacks: they are supposed to be composable. Every decent library has lots of easy-to-use functions for the composition of promises in every thinkable manner, taking care of all the low-level stuff you don't want to deal with.
If you have found a need to compose some promises in a new way that is not supported by an existing helper function, writing your own function with unavoidable Deferreds should be your last option. Consider switching to a more featureful library, and/or file a bug against your current library. Its maintainer should be able to derive the composition from existing functions, implement a new helper function for you and/or help to identify the edge cases that need to be handled.
Now 7 years later there is a simpler answer to this question:
How do I avoid the explicit constructor antipattern?
Use async functions, then await every Promise!
Instead of manually constructing nested Promise chains such as this one:
function promised() {
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
getAnotherPromise(result).then(function(result2) {
resolve(result2);
});
});
});
}
just turn your function async and use the await keyword to stop execution of the function until the Promise resolves:
async function promised() {
const result = await getOtherPromise();
const result2 = await getAnotherPromise(result);
return result2;
}
This has various benefits:
Calling the async function always returns a Promise, which resolves with the returned value and rejects if an error get's thrown inside the async function
If an awaited Promise rejects, the error get's thrown inside the async function, so you can just try { ... } catch(error) { ... } it like the synchronous errors.
You can await inside loops and if branches, making most of the Promise chain logic trivial
Although async functions behave mostly like chains of Promises, they are way easier to read (and easier to reason about)
How can I await a callback?
If the callback only calls back once, and the API you are calling does not provide a Promise already (most of them do!) this is the only reason to use a Promise constructor:
// Create a wrapper around the "old" function taking a callback, passing the 'resolve' function as callback
const delay = time => new Promise((resolve, reject) =>
setTimeout(resolve, time)
);
await delay(1000);
If await stops execution, does calling an async function return the result directly?
No. If you call an async function, a Promise gets always returned. You can then await that Promise too inside an async function. You cannot wait for the result inside of a synchronous function (you would have to call .then and attach a callback).
Conceptually, synchronous functions always run to completion in one job, while async functions run synchronously till they reach an await, then they continue in another job.

Promise not getting caught in the catch block [duplicate]

I was writing code that does something that looks like:
function getStuffDone(param) { | function getStuffDone(param) {
var d = Q.defer(); /* or $q.defer */ | return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
// or = new $.Deferred() etc. | // using a promise constructor
myPromiseFn(param+1) | myPromiseFn(param+1)
.then(function(val) { /* or .done */ | .then(function(val) {
d.resolve(val); | resolve(val);
}).catch(function(err) { /* .fail */ | }).catch(function(err) {
d.reject(err); | reject(err);
}); | });
return d.promise; /* or promise() */ | });
} | }
Someone told me this is called the "deferred antipattern" or the "Promise constructor antipattern" respectively, what's bad about this code and why is this called an antipattern?
The deferred antipattern (now explicit-construction anti-pattern) coined by Esailija is a common anti-pattern people who are new to promises make, I've made it myself when I first used promises. The problem with the above code is that is fails to utilize the fact that promises chain.
Promises can chain with .then and you can return promises directly. Your code in getStuffDone can be rewritten as:
function getStuffDone(param){
return myPromiseFn(param+1); // much nicer, right?
}
Promises are all about making asynchronous code more readable and behave like synchronous code without hiding that fact. Promises represent an abstraction over a value of one time operation, they abstract the notion of a statement or expression in a programming language.
You should only use deferred objects when you are converting an API to promises and can't do it automatically, or when you're writing aggregation functions that are easier expressed this way.
Quoting Esailija:
This is the most common anti-pattern. It is easy to fall into this when you don't really understand promises and think of them as glorified event emitters or callback utility. Let's recap: promises are about making asynchronous code retain most of the lost properties of synchronous code such as flat indentation and one exception channel.
What's wrong with it?
But the pattern works!
Lucky you. Unfortunately, it probably doesn't, as you likely forgot some edge case. In more than half of the occurrences I've seen, the author has forgotten to take care of the error handler:
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
resolve(result.property.example);
});
})
If the other promise is rejected, this will happen unnoticed instead of being propagated to the new promise (where it would get handled) - and the new promise stays forever pending, which can induce leaks.
The same thing happens in the case that your callback code causes an error - e.g. when result doesn't have a property and an exception is thrown. That would go unhandled and leave the new promise unresolved.
In contrast, using .then() does automatically take care of both these scenarios, and rejects the new promise when an error happens:
return getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
return result.property.example;
})
The deferred antipattern is not only cumbersome, but also error-prone. Using .then() for chaining is much safer.
But I've handled everything!
Really? Good. However, this will be pretty detailed and copious, especially if you use a promise library that supports other features like cancellation or message passing. Or maybe it will in the future, or you want to swap your library against a better one? You won't want to rewrite your code for that.
The libraries' methods (then) do not only natively support all the features, they also might have certain optimisations in place. Using them will likely make your code faster, or at least allow to be optimised by future revisions of the library.
How do I avoid it?
So whenever you find yourself manually creating a Promise or Deferred and already existing promises are involved, check the library API first. The Deferred antipattern is often applied by people who see promises [only] as an observer pattern - but promises are more than callbacks: they are supposed to be composable. Every decent library has lots of easy-to-use functions for the composition of promises in every thinkable manner, taking care of all the low-level stuff you don't want to deal with.
If you have found a need to compose some promises in a new way that is not supported by an existing helper function, writing your own function with unavoidable Deferreds should be your last option. Consider switching to a more featureful library, and/or file a bug against your current library. Its maintainer should be able to derive the composition from existing functions, implement a new helper function for you and/or help to identify the edge cases that need to be handled.
Now 7 years later there is a simpler answer to this question:
How do I avoid the explicit constructor antipattern?
Use async functions, then await every Promise!
Instead of manually constructing nested Promise chains such as this one:
function promised() {
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
getOtherPromise().then(function(result) {
getAnotherPromise(result).then(function(result2) {
resolve(result2);
});
});
});
}
just turn your function async and use the await keyword to stop execution of the function until the Promise resolves:
async function promised() {
const result = await getOtherPromise();
const result2 = await getAnotherPromise(result);
return result2;
}
This has various benefits:
Calling the async function always returns a Promise, which resolves with the returned value and rejects if an error get's thrown inside the async function
If an awaited Promise rejects, the error get's thrown inside the async function, so you can just try { ... } catch(error) { ... } it like the synchronous errors.
You can await inside loops and if branches, making most of the Promise chain logic trivial
Although async functions behave mostly like chains of Promises, they are way easier to read (and easier to reason about)
How can I await a callback?
If the callback only calls back once, and the API you are calling does not provide a Promise already (most of them do!) this is the only reason to use a Promise constructor:
// Create a wrapper around the "old" function taking a callback, passing the 'resolve' function as callback
const delay = time => new Promise((resolve, reject) =>
setTimeout(resolve, time)
);
await delay(1000);
If await stops execution, does calling an async function return the result directly?
No. If you call an async function, a Promise gets always returned. You can then await that Promise too inside an async function. You cannot wait for the result inside of a synchronous function (you would have to call .then and attach a callback).
Conceptually, synchronous functions always run to completion in one job, while async functions run synchronously till they reach an await, then they continue in another job.

Is an exception catch functionally the same as promise errorCallback?

I've been using javascript promsises thoughout my angular application but I am tired of repeating the same errorCallback for every promise. I am considering simply wrapping a promise in a try/catch block and having the catch block deal with any promise failures.
Which leads me to asking the question - are the error callbacks redundant if they are in a try/catch block? Will javascript 'catch' the error failure?
Edit: Adding code to reflect how I plan to do this:
try {
$http.post().success(callback);
}(catch)
{
}
The same as:
$http.post().succes(callback()).error(callback)
No, it won't. The reason is that what you are actually doing is queuing your callback function to be invoked when the request gets a successful, asynchronous response. By that time, the execution will have moved past your try/catch block, and you will get an unhandled error.
Another way to look at it is that synchronous, thrown errors immediately propagate up the call tree to the nearest catch block whereas asynchronous error results will only be handlable via the deferred object.
If you wish to invoke the same error handler for multiple promise-based asynchronous operations, you have multiple ways of going about it. The most obvious is injecting $q to your controller and doing something like this:
var deferred1 = $http.get(...);
var deferred2 = someOtherPromiseBasedMethod(...);
$q.all([deferred1, deferred2, ..., deferredN])
.then(null, function (rejection) {
// first failed deferred will provide the rejection value here
});
Another approach is to create a wrapper function:
function handleError(deferred) {
return deferred.then(null, commonErrorHandler);
}
handleError($http.get(...)).then(function (result) {
// Handle the success case here
}
That's still a bit repetitive, but less so, while being more of a declarative approach.

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